53
A Geography Animated with Intentions: Reclaiming In-
digenous Vitality through Land-Based Decolonial Strug-
gles in Frantz Fanon’s Algeria Writings
Nanya Jhingran
In the wake of resurgent engagement with Frantz Fanon’s oeu-
vre through the recent publication of Jean Khalfa and Robert J. C.
Young’s collection of his previously unpublished writings titled Alien-
ation and Freedom (2018), we must acknowledge the relevance of
Fanon’s political and psychiatric writings to our neocolonial present.
Since their publication, Black Skin, White Masks1 as well as Wretched
of the Earth2 have received much critical and scholarly attention, with
the latter having become a touchstone text for revolutionary move-
ments such as the Black Panther Party, among others. However, de-
spite these radical engagements Fanon’s work has been unevenly can-
onized with certain parts of the aforementioned texts gaining great
traction and other works such as A Dying Colonialism3 and Toward the
African Revolution4 remaining relatively obscure. One of the results of
this unevenness is that we stand to lose the nuances that emerge only
from proleptic readings of these earlier texts. This paper argues that
Fanon’s observation of the Manichean divide between colo-
nizer/colonized as that between life/death or mobility/immobility must
be understood specifically as a critique of settler colonialism through a
reading of Wretched of the Earth, Toward the African Revolution, and
A Dying Colonialism. In particular, it meditates on Fanon’s argument
around geology, geography, and infrastructure in colonial and revolu-
tionary Algeria to demonstrate that self-determined land-based sover-
eignty is fundamental to Fanon’s vision of radical decolonization. In
order to fully mobilize Fanon’s thought in our neocolonial present, one
in which structural adjustment, economic liberalization, and corporate-
1Editor’s Note (hereafter referred to as Ed. N.): Originally published in French as
Peau noire, masques blancs in 1952. 2Ed. N.: Originally published in French as Les Damnées de la Terre in 1961.
3Ed. N.: Originally published in French as L’An V de la révolution algérienne in
1959. 4Ed. N.: Originally published in French as Pour la révolution africaine: Écrits
politiques in 1969.
Language, Literature, and Interdisciplinary Studies (LLIDS)
ISSN: 2547-0044
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LLIDS 2.4
54
led land grabs are displacing millions from their indigenous lands all
over the Global South, we must pay heed to his observation that a de-
colonial discourse of national development emerges out of the antico-
lonial revolution and enables the re-establishment of relationality be-
tween the land and the native population of Algeria.
In order to be successful, contemporary anticolonial efforts
must pay attention to the uneven geographies of neocolonialism and
capitalist imperialism which Fanon signals in his Algeria writings. Our
efforts at decolonization must be informed by a critical understanding
of the geopolitics of global capitalism. Global capitalist expansion is
informed by the drive to possess land and resources by undermining
indigenous peoples’ sovereignty, survival, and humanity. While on the
one hand global capitalism has enabled voluntary mobility of the mid-
dle and upper classes across the Global South, it has also forced a far
larger percentage of the earth’s population into poverty and non-
voluntary refugee migration. We must, therefore, frame the emergent
discourse on cosmopolitanism and world citizenship within a recogni-
tion of the large disparity between voluntary and forced migration.
Additionally, in the wake of the 20th
century, which saw a wave of an-
ticolonial nationalist revolutions give way to young independent na-
tion-states across the Global South, much critique is laid upon nation-
alism in view of the failure of the nation-state model to fully secure
economic or political sovereignty in many post-independence nations.5
These intellectual and economic preoccupations (in)form the
selective applications of Fanon’s revolutionary thoughts such that his
globalisms are elevated at the expense of his geographically- and na-
tionally-specific analyses are obscured. Gautam Premnath, in his piece
“Remembering Fanon, Decolonizing Diaspora,” powerfully critiques
5In the field of postcolonial studies, some foundational critiques of nationalism and
anticolonial national discourse include Homi Bhabha’s Nation and Narration (1990)
and Gayatri Spivak’s Critique of Postcolonial Reason (1999). Homi Bhabha cri-
tiques nationalist discourse for maintaining the authoritarian tendencies characteristic
of the project of modernity. In response, he hails Fanon’s claim that “national con-
sciousness, which is not nationalism, is the only thing that will give us an interna-
tional dimension” to make a case for an internationalist idea of the nation which re-
sides in the margin and is ambivalent, or “Janus faced” regarding its borders and
polity. In so doing, however, Bhabha divorces the geographical situatedness and dis-
tinctly anti-colonial basis of Fanon’s idea of the nation which is unambivalently op-
posed to colonization (4). Spivak, on the other hand, critiques the discourse of na-
tionalism for consolidating the figure of the “third world woman” as an
instrumentalized stand-in for the developmental needs of the nation, and as the ter-
rain and symbol of national authenticity to be shielded from “western” influence
(244–248).
Nanya Jhingran
55
the deployment of Fanonian thought for the defense of notions of dias-
pora and hybridity that vacate the crucial role of nationalism in antico-
lonialism. Premnath observes that one of the effects of canonizing
Black Skin, White Masks is that “…such work tends to marginalize the
complex understanding of ‘national consciousness’ derived from the
experience of decolonizing Algeria” (66). He demonstrates that these
pre-revolutionary pre-Algerian texts are quickly taken up by Western
critics because “...the narrative of racialization coincides neatly with
the narrative of modern individuation” and that such deployment ulti-
mately “…breaks off the dialectical drama of Fanon’s perpetual ques-
tioning, and the manner in which his writings on Algeria respond to
the dilemmas voiced in earlier writings” (Premnath 67). It is, therefore,
only by paying attention to the dialectical development of his thought
across texts, especially in his Algeria writings, that we can responsibly
and fully understand his philosophy.6
This paper, in particular, engages with the question of decolo-
nization and nationalism and builds on Premnath’s work to argue that
we must take into account Fanon’s discussion of the crucial role geog-
raphy and land play in fomenting a revolutionary nationalism and na-
tional consciousness in Algeria before, during, and after the Algerian
revolution. The primary conceit of this argument is that by contextual-
izing Fanon’s work within this line of inquiry, we may be able to
counteract previous deployments of his thought that have abstracted
his very specific critique of French settler colonialism in Algeria. This
paper will demonstrate that Fanon prioritizes decolonizing the rela-
tionship to land and developing a land-based nationalism as necessary
steps in the anti-colonial struggle. For Fanon, this approach emerges as
imperative to the development of a nation that can break out of both
the immobility imposed by colonialism as well as the enduring eco-
6Both Neil Lazarus (1993), and Benita Parry (1987) have written against the blanket
repudiations of nationalist discourse that emerged in the 80s and defended the need
to pay attention to the affordances and capacities of nationalist thought in the radical
anticolonial vein. In “Disavowing Decolonization,” Lazarus argues that much recent
critique of nationalism as an ideological paradigm takes post-45 nationalisms as their
object of critique. In turn, Lazarus makes a case for “think[ing] differently about
nationalism-above all in the ongoing context of anti-imperialist struggle” (71).
Benita Parry, whose argument is cited in Lazarus’ paper, positions Bhabha and
Spivak’s deconstructive approach towards colonial discourse as in tension with
Fanon’s designificatory approach and argues that we question “the politics of pro-
jects which dissolve the binary opposition colonial self/colonized other, encoded in
colonialist language as a dichotomy necessary to domination, but also differently
inscribed in the discourse of liberation as a dialectic of conflict and a call to arms?”
(30).
LLIDS 2.4
56
nomic shackles imposed by neocolonial infrastructures of trade and
production.7
Frantz Fanon begins “Colonial War and Mental Disorders” by
demonstrating that contrary to popular justifications, the colonizing
power takes no interest in the humanity of the colonized:
We must remember in any case that a colonized people is not
just a dominated people. Under the German occupation the
French remained human beings. Under the French occupation
the Germans remained human beings. In Algeria there is not
simply domination but the decision, literally, to occupy nothing
else but a territory. The Algerians, the women dressed in haiks,
the palm groves, and the camels form a landscape, the natural
backdrop for the French presence. (Wretched of the Earth 182)
Fanon utilizes theatrical vocabulary to demonstrate that during colo-
nial conquest, Algerian actors become merely the stage upon which
the colonizers act. As “the backdrop” of French colonial activity, the
colonized lose all agentive capacity as they are objectified and terri-
torialized. The land as well as the people are deemed wild, uninhabit-
able, and in need of cultivation. For the colonizer, “…cutting railroads
through the bush, draining swamps, and ignoring the political and eco-
nomic existence of the native population are in fact one and the same
thing” (Wretched 182). The colonized people and the colonized land,
when rendered indistinguishable, become the terra nullius upon which
the colonizing power establishes its institutions and infrastructure.
Throughout his oeuvre, Fanon demonstrates how the colonized, by vir-
tue of being denied their vitality, are immobilized in manifold ways.
This immobilization takes on the form of a social death, “a death on
this side of death, a death in life” (African Revolution 13). Reading
across Fanon’s work, on the one hand, one encounters the death of the
colonized in varied registers—biological, intellectual, psychosomatic,
temporal—as well as the arrest of social life in Algeria. On the other
hand, however, we find deep webs of dynamic and developing institu-
7This paper reads Fanon’s work as theorizing a form of anti-colonial revolutionary
nationalism which is founded upon a decolonized relationship between the indige-
nous body and indigenous land. While Fanon’s work is based in Algeria and takes
the French colonization of Algeria and the Algerian anti-colonial revolution as its
subject of analysis, his theories are applicable beyond this geopolitical location. As
such, this paper makes a claim for a reading protocol for Fanon’s theory of decoloni-
zation rather than a reading protocol for Algerian history. To that degree, any biases
that inhere in Fanon’s depiction of colonial Algeria and the anticolonial revolution
may be duplicated in this reading and should be subject to critique.
Nanya Jhingran
57
tions that work together to defend and develop the colonial project.
Across his work, therefore, Fanon can be read as charting the matrix of
fixity/mobility, arrest/frenzy, and death/vitality to demonstrate how
colonial logics of ‘progress’ and ‘innovation’ depend on the produc-
tion of social death and fractured temporalities, not to mention the
death of the colonized body, as the necessary condition for colonial
advancement.
The colonized are immobilized, both physically and tempo-
rally, by being imagined as coterminous with their land. Although the
initial image of Algeria presented by Fanon holds the potential for
lively co-existence between “the women,” “the palm groves,” and “the
camels,” these vital possibilities are negated by colonial conquest as
they are relegated to the “natural backdrop” (original emphasis) of
“French presence” (Wretched 182; emphasis added). Unlike “French
presence,” which is dynamically active in time, the colonized are as
unmoving and unchanging as the land itself. Vital indigenous networks
of cross-species relations are interpreted by the colonizer as untamed
nature, laying in wait to be transformed by human labor from raw ma-
terial into civilization. In the image described above, the (hallucinated)
visual fixity of life in Algeria gives it the temporality of geologic time,
outside of modern human temporality. In other words, the colonizer
imagines the colonized as no different than the occupied land – just
like the Earth, the colonized provide stable ground for building upon;
just like the Earth, the colonized don’t immediately show the effects of
these colonial renovations. In the beginning to “Colonial War and
Mental Disorder,” Fanon draws an environmental metaphor to explain
the process of decolonization: “…imperialism […] sows seeds of de-
cay here and there that must be mercilessly rooted from our land and
from our minds” (Wretched 181). In doing so, Fanon recognizes that
the forms of violence enacted upon the colonized land and the colo-
nized mind are inseparable, and emphasizes that the process of de-
colonization must therefore happen for both simultaneously. The
stakes of this project emerge through the realization that if the land and
the body are not dialectically decolonized, the effects of colonization
will continue to unravel not only for the human lifespan but, in the
measure of geologic time, for generations to come.
In marking Algeria as undeveloped terra nullius where organic
life unfolds in the measure of geologic (as opposed to human) time,
colonization causes the arrest of Algerian national time. Fanon devel-
ops this argument in Toward the African Revolution in the chapter ti-
tled “Mr. Debre’s Desperate Endeavors” where he states that the
“…new time inaugurated by the conquest, [...] is a colonialist time be-
LLIDS 2.4
58
cause [it is] occupied by colonialist values” (158). He establishes that
colonialist values come to define colonial times thereby negating Al-
gerian values and Algerian time. In order to fully grasp this claim re-
garding national versus colonialist time, we must read proleptically
and pay attention to his arguments around geography. The colonizer
spatializes the question of temporality by determining that certain spa-
tial locations inhabit premodern temporalities.8 From this it follows
that the project of bringing these locations into the time of modernity
must needs be a process of spatial restructuring. In this same piece,
Fanon argues that the colonial conquest of Algeria, “…since it can be
neither sentimental nor intellectual, [...] will be geographic” (African
Revolution 159). The colonialist is not interested in appealing to the
sentimentality or the intellect of the colonized and proceeds on a pri-
marily geographic basis. The colonized human now emerges as an-
other element of the geographic that requires taming and integration.
This process denies the humanity of the colonized and, in doing so,
erases the fact that this society functions within its native and dynamic
temporal structure. Instead, in the colonial period, the human and the
land are understood as raw materials to be acquired and developed.
Fanon calls this form of colonial territorializing “a geography ani-
mated with intentions,” and argues that it is this framing of the nation
as untamed land which enables France to claim that “…the authority
of France in Algeria is a requirement of nature” (African Revolution
160). For the French, this empty land must be enfolded into the New
World, made habitable for (ostensibly Enlightenment era definitions
of) Man, and infused with the temporality of future-oriented develop-
ment and progress.9
French colonialists, therefore, establish territorial claims by
framing humans as coterminous with territory and thereby disavowing
8Dipesh Chakraborty, in his book Provincializing Europe (2000), argues that so-
called third-world nations were seen to inhabit the “waiting room of history” which
he calls ‘Time 2’ in opposition to ‘Time 1’ defined as the “time of modernity” inhab-
ited by the first-world nations of the Western world. It is this same colonial logic that
Fanon brings to our attention which fractures temporality by spatializing (8). 9For more work which attends to the “overrepresentation of Man” and the European
colonial settlement of land in the interest of civilizing the “savage,” see Sylvia
Wynter (2003), Katherine McKittrick (2006), among others. In particular, Wynter’s
exploration in “Unsettling the coloniality of Truth/Power/Being” of the colonial in-
vention of the category of rights-bearing Man as engendering a definition of the Hu-
man which carried within it definition of non-Human others draws on and extends
Fanon’s idea that decolonization would give birth to a new concept of human (pp
267–270). Katherine McKittrick, in her book Demonic Grounds, also reads Fanon
(among others) to argue that “deep space” and “a poetics of landscape” are crucial to
understanding colonial spatial infrastructures as active sites of contestation (23–35).
Nanya Jhingran
59
the possibility of an Algerian humanism. Algeria, replete with all its
inhabitants (human and nonhuman), becomes the stilled geographic
foundation upon which colonial infrastructure is established. Fanon’s
choice of terminology for explaining the immobilization of the Alge-
rian is reflective of this process of stilling. In the phase of colonial set-
tlement, Fanon describes Algeria as “…a world compartmentalized,
Manichean and petrified, a world of statues” (Wretched 15; emphasis
added). He describes the arrest of the colonized subject in geologic
terms: petrifaction, a process which involves “…the replacement of the
soft organic parts of plant or animal remains by inorganic material,
esp. calcium carbonate or silica, often preserving the original structure
of the organism” (“petrifaction, n.”). Petrifaction, the process whereby
life sediments into rocks, which are then mined to yield raw materials
for colonial infrastructure. Thus, colonial infrastructure extracts not
only labor but also vital energy from indigenous life.
It is important to note, however, that Fanon does not claim that
native life is entirely fossilized in the process of conquest. He tacti-
cally maintains that colonized life presents “a virtually petrified back-
ground” (Wretched 15). For Fanon, the stillness of the native can be
read as a sort of crouching in preparation; he notes that for the colo-
nized “…the impulse to take the colonist’s place maintains a constant
muscular tonus [...]” and that “…it is not that he is anxious or terror-
ized, but he is always ready to change his role as game for that of
hunter” (Wretched 16, 17). Fanon hereby preserves the existential po-
tential for action and mobility by limiting his claim to say that “…on
the inside the colonist achieves only a pseudo-petrification” (Wretched
17). It is, however, still important to meditate on this petrification, in-
complete as it is, in order to understand its undeniable implications:
the immobilized bodies of the colonized are unable to fight the fever-
ish development of colonial infrastructure in the initial phase and sub-
sequently become locked into their interiority (“on the inside”) while
remaining frozen as rocks on their land. No authentic mobility can be
achieved unless this interiority is translated into material action carried
out in physical space. Frozen bodies must regain their lost dynamism
in order for decolonization to take effect.
This possibility of the native enacting his desire in public space
is eradicated by the colonizer who demobilizes not only the natives but
also their culture. For Fanon, the term ‘culture’ partly describes the
interactions between people and their land-based infrastructure. In
“Racism and Culture,” he defines culture as “…certain constellations
of institutions, established by particular men, in the framework of pre-
cise geographical areas” (African Revolution 31). By providing this
LLIDS 2.4
60
particular definition, he clarifies culture as that which is both socially-
and geographically-specific to the lifeworld of the native. Most strik-
ingly, the cultural apparatus articulated by the people is dynamic and
open to change; he states that it is “…characteristic of a culture [...] to
be open, permeated by spontaneous, generous and fertile lines of
force” (African Revolution 34). The colonizer, however, is set to deny
this sort of dynamism to the colonized. The colonized peoples’ culture
is therefore taken to be as static as they are thought to be. Producing
effects similar to Edward Said’s theory of orientalism, Fanon describes
that when approached and (re)formulated by the colonizer, the native
culture becomes ossified, static, and resistant to change and dynamism.
By being ascribed the form of so many discovered artefacts,
native ways of living are not imagined to be constantly evolving to
serve the indigenous population. As a result, “…the [native] culture
[...] both present and mummified, [...] testifies against its members”
(African Revolution 34). The colonized are therefore fixed in their to-
tality and placed into a framework of meanings that is foreign to them,
to the degree that “…concern with “respecting the [indigenous] culture
of the native populations” […] betrays a determination to objectify, to
confine, to imprison, to harden” (African Revolution 34). Given that
native life is understood as less-than-human, the colonizer’s approach
to native culture is always already archaeological, rather than anthro-
pological; it proceeds in a taxonomic rather than dynamic fashion. The
colonizer is similarly unable to preserve the vitality and dynamism of
indigenous institutions which necessarily share a dialogic relationship
with indigenous culture.
During the colonial period, therefore, the dynamism of indige-
nous culture and infrastructure is frozen to make way for the colo-
nizer’s mobility. By the way of facetious claims of respect for the cul-
ture, the colonizer also deadens those living institutions “…in which
qualities of dynamism, of growth, of depth can be recognized” and re-
places them with “…archaic, inert institutions, [...] patterned like a
caricature of formerly fertile institutions” (African Revolution 34).
These new institutions are “archaic” and “inert” precisely because they
are driven by the colonizer’s fixed definition of the indigenous culture
– a definition which does not imagine this culture as living, adaptive,
or dynamic. Fanon argues that as a result of this refusal to acknowl-
edge the vitality of indigenous life, even though colonial institutions
mimic the indigenous ones that they have replaced, they are incompe-
tent to fulfill the needs of native population by failing to recognize and
respond to their changing needs. In so doing, this colonial infrastruc-
Nanya Jhingran
61
ture levels deep psychosomatic injury on indigenous people’s minds
and bodies.10
Across his works, Fanon pays special attention to this form of
psychosomatic harm weathered by indigenous people in their encoun-
ters with colonial institutions. In “the North African Syndrome,” he
explores how the western doctor is unable to provide meaningful diag-
noses to the North African in Europe. Although this piece is not set in
Algeria, it helps contextualize Fanon’s insistent attention to geography
and infrastructure with respect to indigenous psychology. He explains
that European medical professionals go about their diagnostic process
with an “a priori attitude”—that they expect specific symptoms to ap-
pear as markers of certain illnesses in order to warrant the appropriate
treatment. This approach assumes that the patient will be able to
evaluate his/her psychological response to the environment and report
the harrowing symptoms in an appropriately legible manner. Fanon
disturbs these assumptions and argues that the North African, how-
ever, is unable to have any stable experience of the French environ-
ment because it “…does not come with a substratum common to his
race, but on a foundation built by the European” (African Revolution 7;
emphasis added). This loss of ‘substratum,’ of common racial ground
disables his phenomenological experience of his environment such that
“…without a family, without love, without human relations, without
communion with the group, the first encounter with himself will occur
in a neurotic mode, in a pathological mode” (African Revolution 13).
Fanon employs poetic language to demonstrate how the North African
repeatedly experiences death in every colonial space he traverses in his
everyday existence in the metropole:
A daily death.
a death in the tram,
a death in the doctor’s office,
a death with the prostitutes,
a death on the job site,
a death at the movies,
10
For a compelling exploration of Frantz Fanon’s arguments regarding the harms
produced by colonial psychiatry through the institution of the colonial hospital, refer
to Gibson and Beneduce’s Frantz Fanon, Psychiatry and Politics (2017). In particu-
lar, Gibson and Beneduce explore Fanon’s argument regarding the failure of Western
psychiatry in the colonial context and corroborate that colonial infrastructures not
only fail to provide care to the colonized subaltern but also trap them in medical di-
agnoses that pathologize them: “Late colonial society, in other words, could produce
only files—official versions of the colonized, masked in the discourse of an eth-
nopsychiatry that presumed to understand the Arab mind and then quickly patholo-
gized it as defective and subject to “North African syndrome”” (181).
LLIDS 2.4
62
a multiple death in the newspapers,
a death in the fear of all decent folk of going out after mid-
night,
a death. (African Revolution 13)
Fanon employs the formal poetic elements of repetition and parallel
structure to denote how the North African experiences these diverse
colonial infrastructures as all enacting upon him a similar and persis-
tent violence. No matter their intended utility, the North African en-
counters only death in various registers in these European institutions.
Because these institutions are built by the colonizer with no regard to
the colonized, these men feel alienated by these institutions precisely
because “…by the very fact of appearing on the scene, [they enter]
into a pre-existing framework,” one which was designed to be hostile
to them (African Revolution 7).
If we keep this analysis in mind while reading Fanon’s com-
mentary on Algeria, we are able to observe the extent to which the Al-
gerian is alienated by the loss of their native infrastructure. Cut off
from their land, trapped in the colonizer’s definition of their culture,
and robbed of their indigenous institutions, native life is both physi-
cally and psychically immobilized. Over this fossilized foundation, the
colonizer begins setting up new institutions that serve their own needs.
Unlike the fixity endured by the Algerian, Fanon demonstrates how
the European enjoys immense social and economic mobility in the
colony:
The European individual in Algeria does not take his place in a
structured and relatively stable society. The colonial society is
in perpetual movement. Every settler invents a new society,
sets up or sketches new structures. The differences between
craftsmen, civil servants, workers, and professionals are poorly
defined. Every doctor has his vineyards and the lawyer busies
himself with his rice fields as passionately as any settler. (Dy-
ing Colonialism 134)
It is important to read these descriptions of mobility and poten-
tial in the colonizers alongside the descriptions of arrest and living-
death in the colonized to fully grasp the dynamic Fanon identifies. In
the space of the colony, the colonized are ontologized as land, their
cultures are overdetermined, and their institutions are rendered obso-
lete. Meanwhile, the colonizer “invents,” “sets up,” and “sketches”;
their social roles are “poorly defined.” In violent contrast to the na-
tive’s embodied death, Fanon states that “…in the heart of every Euro-
Nanya Jhingran
63
pean in the colonies there slumbers a man of energy, a pioneer, an ad-
venturer” (Dying Colonialism 133). By drawing these contrasts, Fanon
clarifies that the colonized and the colonizer are not just in a position
of ideological opposition but that the immobilization of the colonized
is the necessary precondition for colonial activity. Colonial institutions
are built through the negation of the vitality of the native and the de-
struction of their active relationship with their land.
No aspect of infrastructural modernization and development
enacted by the colonizer can truly benefit or serve the native until and
unless they acknowledge their humanity. In “Letter to a Frenchman”
Fanon charges the most liberal of Frenchmen, who are ready to leave
Algeria, with being “…concerned about Man but strangely not about
the Arab” (African Revolution 48). He urges them to open their eyes to
their complicity in Algeria’s destruction. He powerfully describes the
utter abjection felt daily by the Algerian fellah (peasant) in language
that mirrors his description of the North African in France:
Motionless fellah and your arms move and your bowed back
but your life stopped. The cars pass, and you don’t move. They
could run over your belly and you wouldn’t move.
Arabs on the roads.
Sticks slipped through the handle of the basket.
Empty basket, empty hope, this whole death of the fellah.
Two hundred fifty francs a day.
Fellah without land.
Fellah without reason. [...]
On your face despair.
In your belly resignation...
What does it matter fellah if this country is beautiful. (African
Revolution 50, 51)
The psycho-affective similarities between this excerpt and the one
from “The North African Syndrome” animate the core of Fanon’s ar-
gument about geography and decolonization. In his account, French
colonization has not only settled on Algerian land, it has infrastructur-
ally transformed it to the degree that it is unrecognizable as Algeria.
This colony operates entirely in a French framework and the experi-
ence of the North African, despite being on his native land, is that of
being in a foreign nation. As a result, “…in this petrified zone, not a
ripple on the surface, the palm trees sway against the clouds, the waves
of the sea lap against the shore, the raw materials come and go, legiti-
mating the colonist’s presence, while more dead than alive the colo-
nized subject crouches forever in the same old dream” (Wretched 14).
LLIDS 2.4
64
In order to break from this dream-like pseudo-petrification, the colo-
nized population must shatter this infrastructure that keeps them cap-
tive and build the institutions that will support their mobility.
Fanon argues that it is absolutely impossible, during the antico-
lonial revolution, to preserve the colonizer’s institutions while estab-
lishing national sovereignty. He categorically states in “On Violence”
that “…to dislocate the colonial world does not mean that once the
borders have been eliminated there will be a right of way between the
two sectors” (Wretched 6). Instead, effective decolonization “…means
nothing less than demolishing the colonist’s sector, burying it deep
within the earth or banishing it from the territory” (Wretched 6). In
other words, the colonizer’s territorial claims must be negated, and
their infrastructure flattened to the ground.11
The decolonized nation
must be built upon Algerian soil and its institutions devised in accor-
dance with the emerging national culture and indigenous needs. For
Fanon, the peasantry emerges as a key actor both during the revolution
and post-independence precisely because “…the rural masses have
never ceased to pose the problem of their liberation in terms of vio-
lence, of taking back the land from the foreigners, in terms of the na-
tional struggle and armed revolt” (Wretched 79; emphasis added).
Unlike the urban population who are at the heart of the colonial metro-
pole, the peasantry in the interior “…survive in a kind of petrified state
but keep intact their moral values and their attachment to the nation”
(Wretched 79). These peasants as “…veritable exiles in their own
country and severed from the urban milieu where they drew up the
concepts of nation and political struggle…” clarify to the intellectuals
that the primary objective is to reclaim the land (Wretched 78). The
urban movement, led by the nationalist intellectuals, must therefore
establish a close, dialectical relationship with the rural masses for they
“…take a global stance from the very start. Bread and land: how do we
go about getting bread and land?” (Wretched 14).
The importance of land does not merely inform the spirit or
symbolism of the Algerian revolution. Land materializes as central to
both insurrectionary strategy in the revolutionary stage and economic
strategy in the post-independence phase. In the revolutionary phase,
11
In a recent article titled “Concerning Maoism: Fanon, Revolutionary Violence, and
Postcolonial India” (2013), Priyamvada Gopal reads Fanon’s famous claim from “On
Violence” where he argues that “decolonization is always a violent event” as sug-
gesting that the destruction of institutional imperialism is necessarily violent in the
manner that it restructures society in a radical way. We can similarly read this call
for the destruction of the colonist’s sector as signifying the oppositional modality in
which decolonization apprehends colonial infrastructure.
Nanya Jhingran
65
guerilla warfare becomes the way in which the Algerian revolutionary
army makes up for its lack of military instruments and technology. In
“On Violence,” Fanon claims “…guerrilla warfare [as the] instrument
of violence of the colonized” (Wretched 26). It is, however, not only
because it compensates for the lack of arms that guerilla warfare be-
comes a primary weapon in the anticolonial revolution. Guerrilla war-
fare, as that which is performed in relation with the land, remobilizes
settled land and uses it to indigenous advantage. As Fanon observes,
The national liberation army is not an army grappling with the
enemy in a single, decisive battle but travels from village to
village, retreating into the forest and jumping for joy when the
cloud of dust raised by the enemy’s troops is seen in the valley.
The tribes begin to mobilize, the units move their positions,
changing terrain. [...] Now it is we who are in pursuit. Despite
all his technology and firepower, the enemy gives the impres-
sion he is floundering and losing ground. (Wretched 86; em-
phasis added)
Drawing upon the native knowledge of the land, especially in the inte-
rior, the masses reform their relationship with the land so that it no
longer works against them. Moreover, it is a form of attack that is
deeply mobile and active; in which “…you no longer fight on the spot
but on the march [and] every fighter carries the soil of the homeland to
war between his bare toes” (Wretched 85). Fought in dynamic relation
with “…muscular the land, guerrilla warfare mobilizes the petrified
colonized subject and their dreams, dreams of action, dreams of ag-
gressive vitality” (Wretched 15). While Fanon finds this militant form
of action necessary during the revolutionary phase, he does argue that
it is important that it be developed around a sound intellectual agenda.
He states that in order to “…transform the movement from a peasant
revolt to a revolutionary war,” the national leaders must “…rediscover
politics, no longer as a sleep-inducing technique or as a means of mys-
tification, but as the sole means of fueling the struggle and preparing
the people for a clear-sighted national leadership” (Wretched 86). A
truly mobilized national politics therefore emerges as that which
guides and is guided by the militant land-based insurrection of the
masses.12
12
Fanon’s emphasis on the importance of land as both symbolic and material re-
source in the anticolonial struggle must be read within the particular context of the
French settler’s colonial conquest of Algeria. In other postcolonial locations, nation-
alist ideology’s use of land as symbolic resource has been critiqued for being a par-
ticularly gendered and gendering construction of land-as-woman or woman-as-land.
LLIDS 2.4
66
In the post-independence phase, once the revolutionary war is
over, this land-based politics must expand in order to (in)form the
foundation of the new nation. Fanon declares that after independence
any national leader “…must first restore dignity to all citizens, furnish
their minds, fill their eyes with human things and develop a human
landscape for the sake of its enlightened and sovereign inhabitants”
(144; emphasis added). Even though the colonizer brings modern
technology and infrastructure to the colony, he ultimately dehumanizes
the native. Upon his departure, therefore, the process of modernization
must be preceded by an evaluation of indigenous infrastructural needs.
In this process, Fanon argues, it is important to pay attention to the re-
lationship with land and soil. He points out that “…the colonial sys-
tem, in fact, was only interested in certain riches, certain natural re-
sources, to be exact those that fueled its industries” (Wretched 56). As
already discussed in the paper, the Algerian people, in being made co-
terminous with their land, became another natural resource for the
colonizer and did not participate in the development of their land as
agentive actors. As a result,Fanon notes that “…no reliable survey has
been made of the soil or subsoil” (Wretched 56). In order to set up
their national industries such that they do not merely fulfil the needs
established by the colonizer and to thereby avoid effective neo-
colonization, “…everything needs to be started over again: the type of
exports needs to be changed, not just their destination, the soil needs
researching as well as the subsoil, the rivers and why not the sun”
(Wretched 57). Both production and trade must therefore be thor-
oughly informed by the native’s self-directed study of the land in order
to develop a fully sovereign national economy.
Fanon’s insistence on research-based development perhaps
stems from his commitment to invention and creativity. As early as in
Black Skin, White Masks he claims that the only way to repair the
traumatic effects of the “split imposed by the Europeans” involves no
less than “restructuring the world” (Black Skin 63). In the conclusion
to Black Skin, White Masks, he again emphasizes the importance of
sovereign self-development when he states,
I am not a prisoner of History. I must not look for the meaning
of my destiny in that direction.
I must constantly remind myself that the real leap consists of
introducing invention into life.
For more, see “Legacies of Departure: Decolonization, Nation-Making and Gender”
by Urvashi Butalia and “Nations in an Imperial Crucible” by Mrinalini Sinha in Lev-
ine’s Gender and Empire (2004).
Nanya Jhingran
67
In the world I am heading for, I am endlessly creating myself.
[…]
The density of History determines none of my acts.
I am my own foundation.
And it is by going beyond the historical and instrumental given
that I initiate my cycle of freedom. (204, 205)
Decolonization, for Fanon, emerges as an opportunity not only to be
free from the material rule of the colonizer but also to escape the his-
torical constrictions placed upon the colonized. It is an opportunity to
undo the colonial petrification of mind and body, and invent radically
new ways of living in the world. Most importantly, it must be seized as
an opportunity to embody a form of critical mobility which does not
merely depend on the given historical forms of the human but which
constantly interrogates them and invents new ones. In the last sentence
of Black Skin, White Masks, Fanon proclaims “O my body, always
make me a man who questions!” (Black Skin 206). This call to the
body, rather than the mind, suggests that the decolonizing process is as
organic as it is intellectual. The colonized body is that which had been
petrified; whose muscles had slowly atrophied; which had been turned
to rock. Decolonization must not only rehabilitate these atrophied
muscles but also create the conditions for their regular use and devel-
opment. This requires the setup of infrastructure that is responsive to
the needs of the newly mobile society.
Since the petrification of the colonized was achieved through
the destruction of their native infrastructure and the mummification of
their once-living cultures, decolonization must maintain a sustained
focus on revamping its cultural and infrastructural core. Fanon is cog-
nizant of this when he states that “…it is not possible for a man to
evolve otherwise than within the framework of a culture that recog-
nizes him and that he decides to assume” (African Revolution 34). It is
imperative to develop a cultural identity that facilitates the growth of
the decolonized society. This cultural identity, however, cannot be
merely mined from the precolonial past. Given that conquest causes
irrecoverable damage and introduces entirely new conflicts into the
colonized world, any cultural identity needs to be formed with respect
to the terms of the present and not just the past. While the colonizer
asserts a fixed cultural identity onto the colonized, the decolonizing
nation must re-assert an open, dynamic cultural identity that breaks
from the exotified colonial version.
Moreover, it is important to develop a new cultural identity not
only for aesthetic or intellectual but material-economic reasons as
LLIDS 2.4
68
well. This, for Fanon, is the only way to escape the clutches of neoco-
lonialism where the newly independent country still functions with
colonial institutions and fulfills the colonizer’s trade needs. He warns
that in the post-independence period, “[the] cult for local products, this
incapacity to invent new outlets is likewise reflected in the entrench-
ment of the national bourgeoisie in the type of agricultural production
typical of the colonial period” (Wretched 100). Much like in the revo-
lutionary period, the intellectual must look not towards the urban na-
tional bourgeoisie but towards the people, the masses, for a glimpse of
the new national culture. He argues that “the culture with which the
intellectual is preoccupied is very often nothing but an inventory of
particularisms. Seeking to cling close to the people, he clings merely
to a visible veneer. This veneer, however, is merely a reflection of a
dense, subterranean life in perpetual renewal” (Wretched 160). It is
significant that his dynamic cultural life is subterranean because the
underground is the zone of operations of the colonized body which
was previously made coterminous with territory. It is, therefore, in this
zone that the national spirit is conceived and reared. The colonized in-
tellectual and the national bourgeoisie, mired in urban colonial life, are
ignorant of this mass activity precisely because of their proximity to
the colonizer. Therefore, for the nation to truly break from the clutches
of the colonizer, these intellectuals and national bourgeoisie must meet
the masses in the underground and join them “…in the process of
dirtying [their] hands in the quagmire of [their] soil” (Wretched 140).
Decolonization, therefore, demands that the colonized society
re-establish a dynamic relationship with their land and build institu-
tions that are reflective and supportive of this relationship. Without
gaining a decolonized knowledge of their geography and geology, the
colonized will remain fixed within the economic and cultural forms
imposed by the colonizer. Moreover, as has been established above,
these forms are built with the purpose of alienating the colonized and
will continue to do so. In order to build a society that is truly sovereign
and hospitable to the indigenous needs of the people and the land, the
new nation must let go of extractive colonial infrastructures. For
Fanon, this disavowal of colonial infrastructures does not foreclose
modernization, it decolonizes the process of assimilating modern tech-
nology by refusing to preserve the dehumanizing technologies im-
posed by the colonizer. Most importantly, the relationship between
man and nation is one in which both are constantly re-defining each
other dialectically. He concludes Wretched of the Earth by stating that
“when the nation in its totality is set in motion, the new man is not an a
posteriori creation of this nation, but coexists with it, matures with it,
and triumphs with it” (Wretched 233). In order to break the fixity im-
Nanya Jhingran
69
posed by colonial contact, the colonized must re-establish a dialectical
and dynamic relationship with the nation.
Reading across Fanon’s works enables us to understand the
various nuances of his theory of anti-colonial nationalism. As a propo-
nent of self-determined inventiveness, his argument welcomes cosmo-
politan trans-nationalisms and discourses of hybrid identity. One must,
however, be careful not to ignore the geographically-specific nature of
his writings. This paper demonstrates that Fanon is deeply invested in
articulating a land-based de-colonial national culture. The model of
nation that he envisions for Algeria is articulated in direct relation with
Algerian land and Algerian people. It is clear that, for him, true sover-
eignty is achieved only once the people have re-established an authen-
tic relationship with their land and collectively set up the infrastructure
needed to support their society, in terms of their ever-unfolding de-
colonizing present(s). It is only by reading proleptically that we can
therefore take political lessons from Black Skin, White Masks in a
manner that is responsible to Fanon’s entire oeuvre. By vacating the
geopolitical specificities of Fanon’s work, we not only miss the oppor-
tunity to most effectively mobilize his thoughts in our political present,
we also do a disservice to his most politically informed writings. The
psycho-affective is only one element of a larger process of invention
that begins at the level of small nations but reverberates globally.
Throughout his work, Fanon argues that only by truly breaking away
from colonialism and envisioning radically new ways of existing in
symbiotic relationships with the Earth and with each other can the
process of decolonization develop a new definition of Man.
LLIDS 2.4
70
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